A review of the Italian novel “The Story Of The Lost Child”

November 5th, 2016 by Roger Darlington

It’s taken me almost three months, but I’ve finally completed my summer/autumn reading project: to read the four works and 1700 pages that make up the ‘Neapolitan Novels’, an acclaimed series by the Italian author Elena Ferrante.

This is a saga of the 60-year friendship between two girls from a poor neighbourhood of Naples after the Second World War: the narrator Elena Greco, known as Lenu, who becomes an accomplished writer and Raffaella Cerullo, known as Lila, whose never leaves Naples.

The first novel in the series is called “My Brilliant Friend” and I reviewed it here. The second novel is titled “The Story Of A New Name” and you can read my review here. The third novel is “Those Who Leave And Those Who Stay” and I reviewed it here.

I’ve just concluded the fourth and final novel in the chronicle which is called “The Story Of The Lost Child” and you’ll find my review here.

Posted in Cultural issues | Comments (0)


Which country does the most good for humanity?

November 5th, 2016 by Roger Darlington

You may not be surprised to hear that the answer – again – is Sweden. You might be surprised to learn that the UK comes in at 4th place. The USA is only 20th. Here are the top and bottom scorers:

The top 5:

1. Sweden

2. Denmark

3. The Netherlands

4. United Kingdom

5. Germany

The bottom 5:

159. Iraq

160. Central African Republic

161. Mauritania

162. Ecuatorial Guinea

163. Libya

These rankings come from the latest annual report of the “Good Country Index,” which ranks 163 countries by their contributions to the global community. You can check out all the scores here.

Posted in World current affairs | Comments (0)


Some good news: the Paris climate agreement is now official

November 4th, 2016 by Roger Darlington

As the “Guardian” newspaper puts it:

“The significance of the Paris agreement coming into force today is easy to miss: it may seem like an anti-climax, given the travails that led up to its signing last December.

But the moment is of huge importance. This is the first time that a legally-binding agreement, signed by all of the world’s functioning governments, has laid down a commitment to limit the growth of greenhouse gases in the atmosphere with the goal of preventing global warming exceeding 2C above pre-industrial levels.

This figure was not plucked out of the increasingly carbon-rich air. It is the limit of what scientists regard as safety, beyond which climate change will run out of control, unstoppable in its damaging effects.”

More information here.

Posted in Environment | Comments (1)


Where the heck is Matt Harding now?

November 4th, 2016 by Roger Darlington

I love the videos created by American traveller Matt Harding.

This is his latest:

Posted in Miscellaneous | Comments (0)


The top ten candidates for Collins word of the year

November 3rd, 2016 by Roger Darlington

The English language is very fluid and dynamic with new words coming along all the time, not all of which stay the course. Collins Dictionary has announced that Brexit is its word of the year – this year, use of the word has increased by 3,400% – but the other words on its list of finalists were:

  • Hygge
  • mic drop
  • Trumpism
  • throw shade
  • sharenting
  • snowflake generation
  • dude food
  • uberization
  • JOMO

If you’re not sure what these terms mean, you’ll find more information here.

Posted in Cultural issues | Comments (0)


A review of the latest super-hero movie “Doctor Strange”

November 1st, 2016 by Roger Darlington

“Doctor Strange” is the fourteenth film to be released by Marvel Studios for the Marvel Cinematic Universe and it’s another success for the company – sheer entertainment with some visual pyrotechnics. You can read my review here.

Posted in Cultural issues | Comments (0)


Whatever happened to Halloween?

October 31st, 2016 by Roger Darlington

Last year, almost 60 children came to our door for Halloween. This year, it was less than 30. I blame Brexit. Now what am I supposed to do with all those chocolates?

Posted in My life & thoughts | Comments (0)


What do we do if aliens make contact?

October 31st, 2016 by Roger Darlington

As this short article makes clear, Hollywood has all sorts of answers:

“There’s ‘Contact’ (we build a space ship), ‘District 9’ (coexist unhappily), ‘Close Encounters of the Third Kind’ (friendly abductions) and ‘Independence Day’ (bang!). Next week, Denis Villeneuve’s ‘Arrival’ will give its answer.”

Of course, as the article makes clear, unless the laws of physics can be altered in some unimaginable way no aliens could ever make the journey to visit us and even a two-way exchange of messages would take hundreds of years. So that’s that one more thing you don’t have to worry about.

So back to worrying about Donald Trump. What do you mean, you think he might be an alien?!?

Posted in Science & technology | Comments (0)


A review of the recent movie “The Intern”

October 30th, 2016 by Roger Darlington

There are not enough female writers and directors in film-making and not enough movies that are addressed to the issues of an older audience. “The Intern” is written and directed by a woman of a certain age and appeals to both a maturer audience (the intern is Robert de Niro) and a younger audience (his boss is Anne Hathaway). You can read my review here.

Posted in Cultural issues | Comments (0)


Ever heard of the Dunning-Kruger effect?

October 29th, 2016 by Roger Darlington

The Dunning-Kruger effect is defined as “a cognitive bias in which low-ability individuals suffer from illusory superiority, mistakenly assessing their ability as much higher than it really is”. The phenomenon was first observed in a series of experiments by David Dunning and Justin Kruger of the department of psychology at Cornell University in 1999.

Policial commentators and social scientists are excited because they believe that they have found the most dramatic case of the Dunning-Kruger effect in the history of modern times. It is called Donald J Trump.

Posted in American current affairs, Miscellaneous | Comments (2)